Very Tired and Diaformin

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Very Tired Symptoms and Causes

Normally, your cells grow and die in a controlled way. Cancer cells keep growing without control. Chemotherapy is drug therapy for cancer. It works by killing the cancer cells, stopping them from spreading, or slowing their growth. However, it can also harm healthy cells, which causes side effects.

You may have a lot of side effects, some, or none at all. It depends on the type and amount of chemotherapy you get and how your body reacts. Some common side effects are fatigue, nausea, vomiting, pain, and hair loss. There are ways to prevent or control some side effects. Talk with your health care provider about how to manage them. Healthy cells usually recover after chemotherapy is over, so most side effects gradually go away.

Your treatment plan will depend on the cancer type, the chemotherapy drugs used, the treatment goal, and how your body responds. Chemotherapy may be given alone or with other treatments. You may get treatment every day, every week, or every month. You may have breaks between treatments so that your body has a chance to build new healthy cells. You might take the drugs by mouth, in a shot, as a cream, or intravenously (by IV).

Very Tired Clinical Trials and Studies

Treatments might be new drugs or new combinations of drugs, new surgical procedures or devices, or new ways to use existing treatments. The goal of clinical trials is to determine if a new test or treatment works and is safe. Clinical trials can also look at other aspects of care, such as improving the quality of life for people with chronic illnesses. People participate in clinical trials for a variety of reasons. Healthy volunteers say they participate to help others and to contribute to moving science forward. Participants with an illness or disease also participate to help others, but also to possibly receive the newest treatment and to have the additional care and attention from the clinical trial staff.

Change from Baseline in Hemoglobin A1c; Number of Participants Experiencing An Adverse Event (AE); Number of Participants Discontinuing Study Treatment Due to an AE; Change from Baseline in Fasting Plasma Glucose; Change from Baseline in Body Weight at Week 26; Number of participants with a HbA1c of <7% (53 mmol/mol) at Week 26; Change from Baseline in Systolic Blood Pressure; Change from Baseline in Diastolic Blood Pressure; Change from Baseline in Bone Mineral Density at Week 26; Change from Baseline in Bone Mineral Density at Week 52; Change from Baseline in Bone Mineral Density at Week 104; Number of participants with HbA1c <=6.5% (48 mmol/mol) at Week 26; Number of participants requiring glycemic rescue therapy up to Week 26; Time to glycemic rescue therapy up to Week 26; Change from baseline in bone biomarkers at Week 26; Change from baseline in bone biomarkers at Week 52; Change from baseline in bone biomarkers at Week 104

Change from Baseline In Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) at Week 26; Number of Participants Experiencing An Adverse Event (AE); Number of Participants Discontinuing Study Treatment Due to an AE; Change from Baseline in Fasting Plasma Glucose (FPG) at Week 26; Change from Baseline in Body Weight at Week 26; Number of Participants with a HbA1c <7% (53 mmol/mol) at Week 26; Change from Baseline in 2-hour Post-prandial Plasma Glucose at Week 26; Change from Baseline in Systolic Blood Pressure at Week 26; Change from Baseline in Diastolic Blood Pressure at Week 26

If you think you may have a medical emergency, call your doctor or 911 immediately.

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